The New Wilderness
-
- $22.99
Publisher Description
A Washington Post, NPR, and Buzzfeed Best Book of the Year • Shortlisted for the Booker Prize
“More than timely, the novel feels timeless, solid, like a forgotten classic recently resurfaced — a brutal, beguiling fairy tale about humanity. But at its core, The New Wilderness is really about motherhood, and about the world we make (or unmake) for our children.” — Washington Post
""5 of 5 stars. Gripping, fierce, terrifying examination of what people are capable of when they want to survive in both the best and worst ways. Loved this.""— Roxane Gay via Twitter
Margaret Atwood meets Miranda July in this wildly imaginative debut novel of a mother's battle to save her daughter in a world ravaged by climate change; A prescient and suspenseful book from the author of the acclaimed story collection, Man V. Nature.
Bea’s five-year-old daughter, Agnes, is slowly wasting away, consumed by the smog and pollution of the overdeveloped metropolis that most of the population now calls home. If they stay in the city, Agnes will die. There is only one alternative: the Wilderness State, the last swath of untouched, protected land, where people have always been forbidden. Until now.
Bea, Agnes, and eighteen others volunteer to live in the Wilderness State, guinea pigs in an experiment to see if humans can exist in nature without destroying it. Living as nomadic hunter-gatherers, they slowly and painfully learn to survive in an unpredictable, dangerous land, bickering and battling for power and control as they betray and save one another. But as Agnes embraces the wild freedom of this new existence, Bea realizes that saving her daughter’s life means losing her in a different way. The farther they get from civilization, the more their bond is tested in astonishing and heartbreaking ways.
At once a blazing lament of our contempt for nature and a deeply humane portrayal of motherhood and what it means to be human, The New Wilderness is an extraordinary novel from a one-of-a-kind literary force.
Customer Reviews
I Wanted To Enjoy This
I kept waiting for the good stuff. I kept waiting to get swept up and engaged in the story. I kept waiting for the characters to become compelling, or at least interesting. Or at least slightly likeable. It never happened.
Agnes is a typical teenager who thinks she's smarter, more skilled, and more accomplished than she is. Bea is inscrutable. None of the other characters ever get enough material to become remotely "real."
I usually enjoy a less-is-more plot, and deliberate pace, a lack of over-explanation. But this book suffers from so many shortcomings, so much lacking. This was the least interesting "humanity is a plague on the environment" story I've ever read or seen.
The voice actor was quite good, notwithstanding the foregoing.
Ridiculous
Excellent narration that somehow only makes the actual writing and story worse. Dialogue and characters neither believable nor remotely sympathetic/interesting. An out-there and potentially interesting premise wasted on an unfathomably poorly crafted story. Reads (or, rather, listens) like the stupidly fantastical narrative of a gloomy kid who had a bad time at NOLS.